My own personal burglar

I stood tried to figure out who had switched my looking glass for a bay window. Standing outside was a 30-something guy who looked like he hadn’t shaved in a week. He had something on his shirt that looked like smudged cottage cheese. His hair was sticking out in three or four directions.

Though I wasn’t sure if he could hear me through the window, I felt obligated to inform him, “It’s the middle of the damned workday, man. Look at yourself. get away from my home.”

Perhaps, not surprisingly, he offered the same instruction to me. I looked down. I was wearing a pair of three-day-old blue jeans with an A-1 steak sauce stain on the thigh. My t-shirt (something from a Mexican bar I don’t remember ever visiting) was rumpled and bore the stains of a six-month-old child who can’t control his formula. I hadn’t shaved since the morning of the final table in Deauville. And my hair was a mess.

“But I have been working my ass off,” I said out loud. I’m allowed to look like this.

In fact, while I was allowed, I didn’t look too good. After nearly ten years of wearing suits five days a week and shaving every morning, my psyche had staged some sort of rebellion. I’d turned into a slob. It only took a week.

So, late in the week I decided to clean up. I shaved, put on some clean clothes, and ventured out into the world. I went to Circuit City and picked up a new TV and DVD player to replace the 15 year old equipment we’d been watching from bed for the past several years. I went out to eat and to the grocery store. I cooked dinner for my wife and watched a perfectly depressing movie about infidelity and kidnapping.

And then we made wild monkey love (that’s me and the wife, not me and the TV).

About once a day, somebody new calls and says, “So, what’s it like working from home?”

My standard answer is: “It’s odd.”

And it is. When I’m on the road, it’s not a lot different from when I was working in TV. It’s constant action. I work from the time I wake up until the time I finally find my way to bed (or, on the rare occasion, into a bar). I write until the faux carpal tunnel sets in. I drink European Coke Light until I think I need a bed pan at my work station. I meet new people every day and find myself growing my and more comfortable with my new vocation.

Home is different when you work remotely. Without the advances of communications technology, I could be finding the prospect of working from home to be extremely lonely. While I work 8-10 hours a day, I set my own schedule. I sleep a little later than I used to. I work in the late morning and all afternoon. In the early evening, I eat and let the kid vomit on me until he smiles. And then I work for another hour or two before finding a book to get my eyes off the screen. If I want to talk to someone from work, I can’t just pop down to their office for a chat. Instead, I have to message them. If you are working from home currently but don’t have a messaging software in place, you might want to point your manager in the direction of https://www.agora.io/en/real-time-messaging. It makes contacting your team so much easier although it’s not the same as actually going to their office. Right now, it’s “Be Cool.”

Still, it’s odd. I can’t quite say how. I’m not working any less than I used to, but it’s different. I sense I’m finally getting a taste of how real people live. TV is such a screwed up world that you lose all perspective on what’s real and what isn’t. I thought that when I left TV that I would have a great sense of nostalgia about the old days. In fact, due to some unexpected events, I’ve developed an even greater sense of contempt for the business. I hate that’s happened, but it has.

And so, here I sit. I showered today. I’m wearing a clean shirt and that’s a plus.

What’s a little funny is that I’m not even going to get a chance to get used to this. By the end of this week, I’ll be in Miami. I can’t comment on why yet, but it should be a funny story. Then, I head to Austria and Monte Carlo for two weeks.

Odd, indeed.

I’m going to look out that window again and see if that stranger has left. If he hasn’t, I’m going to buy a security system for the house.

Brad Willis

Brad Willis is a writer based in Greenville, South Carolina. Willis spent a decade as an award-winning broadcast journalist. He has worked as a freelance writer, columnist, and professional blogger since 2005. He has also served as a commentator and guest on a wide variety of television, radio, and internet shows.

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